Elizabeth Rush, Pulitzer Prize finalist and author of The Quickening: Creation and Community at the Ends of the Earth, describes her voyage to the most remote place on earth, Antarctica, to see the Thwaites Glacier, a crumbling sheet of ice the size of Florida. It’s melting so fast that it's known as the "doomsday glacier.”
“The only thing I could think of as a metaphoric likeness was the wall in Game of Thrones,” says Rush. She shares her thoughts on individual climate action, carbon footprints, and how her experience in Antarctica framed her own dilemma on motherhood in a rapidly warming world.
“If I'm gonna wish a child into this world, I have to wish this world upon that child, so I better be part of the change,” Rush says.
Midweek Reset: On not giving advice
Bittersweet: Susan Cain on the joy of sweet sorrow
Midweek Reset: On Discipline
‘The Perfectionist’s Guide’: Learning to control our quest for the ideal
‘The Sympathizer’ author Viet Thanh Nguyen on new memoir ‘A Man of Two Faces’
Midweek Reset: Cultivating Attention
Scott Galloway: Can the youth still make it in America?
Midweek Reset: Kieran Setiya on failure + process
Uprooted: Climate migration and scientist activism
KCRW’s “How’s Your Sex Life” discusses falling in love and falling apart with Jonathan Bastian
Midweek Reset: Scott Galloway on Blessings
Border Crossings: Navigating identity, language, and belonging
Midweek Reset: Michael Pollan on psychedelics
Michael Pollan’s long and strange trip: shifting perspectives on food and psychedelics
Midweek Reset: The lesson of Costa Rica
Laughter, leadership, and Improv: navigating the unscripted parts of your life
Midweek Reset: Mood follows action
Are you in a relationship with a narcissist?
Midweek Reset: Peaceful protest
Freud: What he said, why he matters
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Modern West
Left, Right & Center
Here Be Monsters
Bookworm
Design and Architecture
All the Presidents’ Lawyers